arctic cultures take climate fight to berlin film fest
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today
Egypt Today, egypt today
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today

At this year's Berlin Film Festival are taking a cold

Arctic cultures take climate fight to Berlin film fest

Egypt Today, egypt today

Egypt Today, egypt today Arctic cultures take climate fight to Berlin film fest

Arctic region film-makers at the Berlin Film Festival
Berlin - Arab Today

They are fighting to preserve their ancient lifestyles and the very ground under their feet as the Arctic ice cap shrinks and the tundra's permafrost slowly turns to mush.

Polar circle film-makers at this year's Berlin Film Festival are taking a cold, hard look at the plight of the indigenous people on the frontlines of climate change.

In a top-down view of the planet, the NATIVe showcase features films from the icy northern latitudes of Scandinavia, Siberia, Alaska, Canada, Iceland and Greenland.

The common theme is the twin threat faced by native peoples who have traditionally herded reindeer or caribou, or hunted seals and whales, before nation-states put them into permanent towns and their children into residential schools.

In the historical documentary "Kaisa's Enchanted Forest," director Katja Gauriloff tells the story of her late great-grandmother Kaisa, a weathered matriarch of Finland's Skolt Sami minority.

Using old black-and-white footage, it portrays the simple life of the semi-nomadic Sami in summer lakeside cabins and winter block huts, their children riding reindeer and skating on frozen lakes.

Kaisa shares her folk wisdom and magical tales -- she uses white bird feathers to sweep her hut because, she says, evil spirits mistake them for an angel's wing.

The tale darkens when World War II destroys the Sami's ancestral homes and forces them into camps where disease takes a heavy toll. They later move to a permanent settlement, their lives from now shaped by assimilation into Finland.

Gauriloff said that today her community counts just a few hundred people, adding that "the reason I don't speak my mother tongue is there on the screen".

- Tundra teddy bears -

Another loving depiction of a vanishing way of life close to nature is "The Tundra Book. A Tale of Vukvukai -- The Little Rock".

It is an intimate portrait of the 78-year-old Vukvukai and his clan in Siberia's Chukchi community, which lives far north of the tree line. 

Viewers are invited into his clan's heavy-skinned yurts as icy winds howl outside, and watch as herders corral, lasso and wrestle down reindeer for slaughter, offering their thanks to the creator.

The audience laughs as children in furry overalls tumble through the snow, resembling teddy bears.

Then, in the chapter "Steel Bird Takes the Kids Away", a helicopter carries the children off to a Russian state residential school where they spend 10 months of the year.

"Women give birth to people just to throw them away," says a distraught Vukvukai, knowing his language and way of life are disappearing.

"How will we survive?"

Director Aleksei Vakhrushev said that one of Vukvukai's sons went on to work as a gold miner, got drunk one day, lit a cigarette near a petrol canister and died in the explosion.

- Mammoth bones - 

The other common threat for the polar circle communities is melting sea ice and the thawing of the permafrost that covers a quarter of the northern hemisphere.

Scientists say this will release huge amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, in turn accelerating global warming.

But for local indigenous people, warming is already an existential threat, said Vyacheslav Shadrin, chief of the Council of Yukaghir Elders in Siberia's Yakutia region.

"A change of two or three degrees may not seem so big when it's minus 40," he said at a panel talk during the Berlinale festival.

"But a really big problem is weather instability. Hunting, fishing, reindeer herding all depend on our ability to predict the weather and animal behaviour," he continued. 

"Now our elders say nature doesn't trust us anymore."

He said that last winter, unseasonably early snowfalls blanketed lakes before the ice was thick enough to support vehicles -- leaving remote villages cut off for months, short of food and fuel supplies.

Riverside villages now face "catastrophic floods" and heavy erosion almost every year as a result of warmer, wetter weather and increased snow melt.

"Last year it didn't happen," Shadrin said. "That was like a gift from the gods."

On the ocean front, once covered by sea ice, waves now crash into an already destabilised coastline, Torsten Sachs of the German Research Centre for Geosciences said at the same event.

Sachs, who works in Siberia, Alaska and Canada, said the thaw was also causing the sudden draining of tundra lakes, or the appearance of new ones "where they aren't wanted".

Shadrin said the thaw had another effect -- making the collecting of ancient mammoth bones "big business", even though this breaks an age-old taboo.

Some tribal elders think this is what has caused the climate disaster, Shadrin said.

"In our world view the mammoth is the god of the underworld," he said. "If you take the bones, you open the door to the evil spirits from the underworld."

Source: AFP

egypttoday
egypttoday

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

arctic cultures take climate fight to berlin film fest arctic cultures take climate fight to berlin film fest



GMT 07:22 2017 Monday ,20 November

Honda recalls 800,000 minivans over faulty seats

GMT 07:15 2017 Thursday ,30 November

Colombian President invites UAE companies

GMT 13:44 2013 Wednesday ,07 August

Chinese game developers bet on smartphone games

GMT 10:30 2011 Tuesday ,23 August

The Arab-Spanish investment forum 2011

GMT 10:49 2017 Monday ,06 November

Britain frozen out as EU finance chiefs plot future

GMT 14:30 2017 Wednesday ,06 December

India scent Test victory as pollution makes bowlers vomit

GMT 12:32 2018 Tuesday ,16 October

Runaway former sex offender nabbed in Thailand

GMT 16:34 2017 Wednesday ,01 March

Afghan capital attack toll jumps to 16

GMT 20:32 2013 Monday ,17 June

Porsche finds a new target audience

GMT 10:13 2011 Sunday ,31 July

Distressed debt firm eyes Nakheel creditors

GMT 18:25 2016 Thursday ,08 September

Ex-Lankan president’s ‘vanity airline’ grounded

GMT 21:02 2018 Wednesday ,05 September

Magnitude 5.5 earthquake strikes Russia’s Urals region

GMT 18:54 2014 Tuesday ,14 January

Cobalt nanoparticles applied in designing biosensor

GMT 12:00 2013 Wednesday ,31 July

Saudi consumers given teeth whitening kit warning

GMT 14:26 2014 Wednesday ,12 February

Earthquake behind shroud of Turin image

GMT 08:58 2014 Wednesday ,15 January

\'Lone Survivor\' blows away North American box office

GMT 15:32 2015 Sunday ,27 September

Thousands march to remember Mexico's missing students

GMT 01:25 2017 Thursday ,05 January

Strong Earthquake Strikes Off Coast of Fiji

GMT 12:51 2011 Friday ,08 July

No plans to merge Gazprom and Naftogaz
 
 Egypt Today Facebook,egypt today facebook  Egypt Today Twitter,egypt today twitter Egypt Today Rss,egypt today rss  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
egypttoday, Egypttoday, Egypttoday